Huawei Technologies has had a big day. And it’s not even 2:30 p.m. as I write this.

The House Intelligence Committee on Monday released a long-awaited report on the Chinese telecom-equipment maker and one of its brethren, ZTE Corp., at a Capitol Hill news conference.

The committee was pretty blunt in its assessment: Don’t do business with Huawei or ZTE, it warned U.S. companies.

And there were suggestions of other illicit stuff, such as bribery, immigration violations and technological tomfoolery.

Huawei’s response: Show us the evidence of what we’ve supposedly done wrong.

“It’s hard to respond to specific allegations when there were no specifics,” said Bill Plummer, a Huawei spokesman. “Perhaps the specifics are in the double-secret classified report.”

Plummer said the company hasn’t done anything wrong.

“I’ll be as clear as I can possibly be: Huawei categorically denies the allegations in the report,” Plummer said. “This report is little more than an exercise in China bashing … To the extent that the committee has issues with the government of another state, they should take up those issues with the government of the other state.”

Huawei and ZTE have strong Dallas-Fort Worth presences. Huawei's U.S. headquarters is in Plano and ZTE's U.S. base is in Richardson.